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Hey Kevin, uh, yeah George around here you'll actually get arrested, uh, for dumpster diving, believe it or not. Uh, if you're trying to go after things that stores have thrown out, uh, you'll actually get arrested, I think it's theft, uh, up here. Uh, not from the store, but from the dumpster company. Apparently anything that goes into those dumpsters is the property of the company that owns the dumpster, and, uh, they'll actually go to extents up here of locking them. And, um, ones that are not locked, if you get caught going through them, that's a criminal charge, man, believe it or not. I think it's just absolute greed. Um, I know Tim Hortons around here, they throw away so many donuts and sandwiches and, uh, cookies and all that kind of stuff, man. Uh, my sister used to work at Tim Hortons, and, uh, they throw it all in the dumpster and then they lock the dumpster. Like, I think that's crazy. I think it'd be a great idea to pass it out to homeless especially, but then it would be a whole organizational thing, right? You'd have to watch people and make sure they're not fighting over stuff or one person's not stealing it all and selling it to someone else. I mean, it's just, it would become a whole thing. Um, you know, people fighting each other for stuff and I mean, I don't know the right way to handle it, but charging homeless people with theft and making them end up in jail because they're hungry, I think that's absolute ludicrously, especially like you say, for North America, we should have a better system, uh, especially if people are going hungry. I mean, that's just crazy. That's something that should not exist in a first world country. Thanks, Kevin. Be on you, Casey.

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